The
group, mostly of young men from Central America, Venezuela and
Cuba, included families walking with children and babies in
strollers.
"I'm fleeing Cuba with my wife and daughter because of the
suffocating, criminal, assassin Castro-Canel dictatorship,"
migrant Samuel Ventura said.
The migrant caravan began in the city of Tapachula, near the
Mexico-Guatemala border, following two others organized earlier
this month with large contingents of Venezuelans. Both caravans
disbanded in nearby towns.
Asked about the Monday deaths of migrants in an overheated
tractor-trailer in Texas, people in the caravan expressed
sympathy, with some saying they were walking to avoid the danger
of taking other modes of transportation.
"We really are in mourning," said Moises Velez, a migrant from
Venezuela. "It hurts all of us."
(Reporting by Jose Torres; Writing by Brendan O'Boyle; Editing
by Richard Chang)
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